PUBLICATIONS Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets RESEARCH ARTICLE Hydrothermal activity recorded in post Noachian-aged 10.1002/2015JE004989 impact craters on Mars Key Points: Stuart M. R. Turner1, John C. Bridges1, Stephen Grebby2, and Bethany L. Ehlmann3 • Mars craters in post Noachian terrains studied with CRISM to determine 1Space Research Centre, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK, 2British Geological presence of hydrated minerals 3 • Only 3 of 158 craters show Survey, Nottingham, UK, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences and Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute clay-bearing assemblages of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA • Impact hydrothermalism possible in two craters Abstract Hydrothermal systems have previously been reported in ancient Noachian and Hesperian-aged Supporting Information: craters on Mars using CRISM but not in Amazonian-aged impact craters. However, the nakhlite meteorites do • Supporting Information S1 provide evidence of Amazonian hydrothermal activity. This study uses CRISM data of 144 impact craters of • Table S1 ≥7 km diameter and 14 smaller craters (3–7 km diameter) within terrain mapped as Amazonian to search for minerals that may have formed as a result of impact-induced hydrothermal alteration or show excavation of Correspondence to: – J. C. Bridges, ancient altered crust. No evidence indicating the presence of hydrated minerals was found in the 3 7km [email protected] impact craters. Hydrated minerals were identified in three complex impact craters, located at 52.42°N, 39.86°E in the Ismenius Lacus quadrangle, at 8.93°N, 141.28°E in Elysium, and within the previously studied Stokes crater. Citation: These three craters have diameters 20 km, 62 km, and 51 km. The locations of the hydrated mineral outcrops Turner, S. M. R., J. C. Bridges, S. Grebby, and their associated morphology indicate that two of these three impact craters—the unnamed Ismenius Lacus and B. L. Ehlmann (2016), Hydrothermal Crater and Stokes Crater—possibly hosted impact-induced hydrothermal systems, as they contain alteration activity recorded in post Noachian-aged impact craters on Mars, J. Geophys. Res. assemblages on their central uplifts that are not apparent in their ejecta. Chlorite and Fe serpentine are Planets, 121,608–625, doi:10.1002/ identified within alluvial fans in the central uplift and rim of the Ismenius Lacus crater, whereas Stokes crater 2015JE004989. contains a host of Fe/Mg/Al phyllosilicates. However, excavation origin cannot be precluded. Our work suggests that impact-induced hydrothermalism was rare in the Amazonian and/or that impact-induced hydrothermal Received 11 DEC 2015 fi Accepted 10 MAR 2016 alteration was not suf ciently pervasive or spatially widespread for detection by CRISM. Accepted article online 16 MAR 2016 Published online 15 APR 2016 1. Introduction Understanding the history, nature, and occurrence of hydrated minerals in the Martian crust is key to identi- fying potential past habitable environments. Recent investigations carried out using the Mars Exploration Rovers (MER), Mars Express (MEX), Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), and Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) have revealed hydrated minerals in a diverse range of environments [e.g., Squyres et al., 2004; Bibring et al., 2006; Poulet et al., 2007; Ehlmann et al., 2009; Murchie et al., 2009a; Grotzinger et al., 2014; Ehlmann and Edwards, 2014]. Furthermore, remote sensing studies using the OMEGA (Observatoire pour la Minéralogie, l’Eau, les Glaces et l’Activité) and CRISM (Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars) visible to infrared spectrometers on MEX and MRO, respectively, have identified phyllosilicates predominantly in ancient Noachian era terrains of Mars [Poulet et al., 2005; Mustard et al., 2008; Ehlmann et al., 2011a; Carter et al., 2013]. These studies, along with others [e.g., Marzo et al., 2010; Mangold et al., 2012; Osinski et al., 2013], have reported evidence of hydrothermal minerals associated with numerous craters formed in the Noachian and Hesperian terrains, mostly via excavation of older altered material, but with impact-induced hydrothermalism occurring in a small number of craters. Here we investigate nominally Amazonian terrains to determine how widespread impact-associated secondary mineral assemblages within post Noachian craters are and to compare the mineralogy and geologic setting of these assemblages with those in more ancient cratered terrains. The goal is to assess the timing and frequency of occurrence of hydrothermal activity in the Amazonian. 1.1. Remote Sensing of Mars With OMEGA and CRISM ©2016. The Authors. This is an open access article under the In early studies, the OMEGA visible-shortwave infrared imaging spectrometer was utilized to map hydrated terms of the Creative Commons mineral exposures at a spatial resolution (pixel size) of 1.8 km, resulting in the identification of three types Attribution License, which permits use, of hydrated minerals—Fe/Mg phyllosilicates, Al phyllosilicates, and hydrated sulfates—at five locations on distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is Mars: Terra Meridiani, Mawrth Vallis, Nili Fossae, Aram Chaos, and Valles Marineris along with scattered other properly cited. highland locations [Bibring et al., 2006; Poulet et al., 2007]. Interpreting OMEGA observations in the context of TURNER ET AL. POST NOACHIAN IMPACT CRATERS 608 Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets 10.1002/2015JE004989 the geological history of Mars, Poulet et al. [2005] suggested that formation of phyllosilicates occurred predo- minantly during the early Noachian, followed by a more acidic environment in which sulfate formation was prevalent. In a subsequent study, Bibring et al. [2006] proposed three distinct eras of alteration based on OMEGA observations—“Phyllosian,”“Theiikian,” and “Siderikian”—characterized by phyllosilicates, sulfates, and ferric oxides, respectively. These three eras can be loosely linked to the Noachian, Hesperian, and Amazonian epochs [Bibring et al., 2006]. Mustard et al. [2005] reported that OMEGA data in the northern plains of Mars lack strong mafic absorptions as well as absorptions due to hydrated minerals but suggested that surface coatings could mask such signatures. More recently, higher-resolution hyperspectral imagery of Mars has been acquired by the CRISM instrument at 18–40 m/pixel [Murchie et al., 2007, 2009a, 2009b]. The higher spatial resolution of CRISM in comparison to OMEGA has resulted in the identification of numerous hydrated mineral exposures coupled with deposit morphology, thus enabling a more detailed understanding of Mars’s surface mineralogy and providing insights about past environmental conditions. Phyllosilicates, predominantly Fe/Mg smectites, have been detected in layered sediments (Al smectite is also present), intracrater fans, plains sediments, and basement/exhumed deposits (also known as “deep phyllosilicates”)[Mustard et al., 2008; Murchie et al., 2009a]. Many of these deposits contain minerals formed in hydrothermal environments such as chlorite ((Mg,Fe)5Al(AlSi3)O10(OH)8), prehnite (Ca2Al2Si3O10(OH)2), serpentine ((Mg, Fe)3Si2O5(OH)4), and zeolites [Mustard et al., 2008; Ehlmann et al., 2009, 2011b]. Hydrated sulfate mineral deposits have been detected in intracrater clay-sulfate deposits, Meridiani-type layered deposits, valles-type layered deposits, siliceous layered deposits, and gypsum plains [Murchie et al., 2009a]. Carbonate deposits have also been detected, more rarely, with CRISM data in Noachian terrains [Ehlmann et al., 2008, 2009; Murchie et al., 2009a; Carter and Poulet, 2012; Bultel et al., 2015]. Analysis of CRISM data has also helped guide landing site selection and rover-based investigations on MER and MSL. Moreover, CRISM analyses of Gale crater indicated clay deposits [Milliken et al., 2010; Thomson et al., 2011] consistent with X-ray diffraction measurements taken on board MSL to date [Bish et al., 2014; Vaniman et al., 2014]. These deposits formed largely through burial diagenesis of basaltic sediments rather than impact-induced alteration [McLennan et al., 2014; Bridges et al., 2015]. In situ investigations carried out by the MER program have also uncovered evidence of aqueous alteration. Specifically, the MER Opportunity rover has identified the presence of acid groundwater-fed sabkha-type deposits rich in sulfates, along with veins of various phyllosilicate minerals and Ca-sulfate within Noachian materials exposed in Endeavour crater [Arvidson et al., 2014]. The MER Spirit rover has revealed evidence for hydrothermal activity in the Gusev crater floor [Ming et al., 2006; Squyres et al., 2008; Morris et al., 2010; Filiberto and Schwenzer, 2013], although there is no clear link to heat released from the Gusev impact. The in situ measurements made by MER Spirit at Gusev crater are consistent with CRISM observations [Carter and Poulet, 2012]. 1.2. Theory of Impact-Induced Hydrothermal Activity A hypervelocity impact into a planetary crust produces a shock wave that compresses and transfers a large amount of energy to the crust. This shock event is not thermodynamically reversible: upon decompression of the planetary crust by rarefaction waves, waste heat is produced which raises the temperature of the planetary crust [Melosh, 1989]. On Mars, a central uplift is more likely to form for impact craters above 7 km diameter, caused by the rise of deep-seated rocks located beneath the crater as it returns
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